South African crypto-asset service providers must now transmit detailed transaction data directly to the revenue collector, allowing for precise automated reconciliation and targeted audits.
The South African Revenue Service (SARS) has, since March 1, used its most sophisticated tools to date to track crypto-assets and offshore financial interests. The implementation of the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) and the expanded Automatic Exchange of Information (AEOI) regime marks a fundamental shift in the nation’s tax enforcement architecture.
According to a local report, the new rules integrate cryptocurrency transactions and offshore accounts into the same global transparency grid used for traditional banking. For years, crypto users operated under the assumption that multiple wallets, foreign exchanges and layered offshore structures provided a buffer against tax visibility. Legal experts say that landscape has shifted materially.
“The notion that offshore or digital activity exists beyond meaningful tax visibility is increasingly untenable,” said Micaela Paschini, tax legal team lead at Tax Consulting South Africa.
With the rules now active, Paschini said digital and cross-border wealth are no longer beyond the revenue service’s reach. Taxpayers holding crypto through offshore structures or trading on foreign exchanges face a significantly more exposed risk profile.
The shift continues SARS’ move from a reactive stance — relying on voluntary disclosure — to a proactive, data-driven model. Key changes require crypto-asset service providers to collect and transmit detailed transaction data in a format aligned with international standards.
This allows the agency to reconcile declared income against reported transaction-level data with high precision. South Africa is now firmly embedded in a network of more than 120 jurisdictions that systematically exchange bulk taxpayer information. Pattern recognition and data matching will allow officials to identify nondisclosure and incorrect asset classification without relying on guesswork.
Paschini noted the burden of proof remains on the taxpayer to substantiate the source of funds and the nature of gains. However, the “detection gap” has closed. Once this structured data is transmitted, Paschini said, “risk profiling accelerates” and “audit selection becomes more targeted.”
Paschini urged taxpayers with historic, undeclared digital or offshore assets to consider the Voluntary Disclosure Programme (VDP). Engaging with the revenue service proactively remains a strategic option to regularize affairs before automated data flows trigger a formal audit or enforcement action.
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